Next-Generation And Royalty-Free AV1 Video Codec Is Released

Credit: AOMThe Alliance for Open Media (AOM) announced the first version of AV1, a next-generation open and royalty-free video codec, developed by major players in the technology and video streaming industries.

A Next-Generation Royalty-Free Codec

AV1 was born out of a necessity to bring an open and royalty-free video codec to the web for which video platforms or device makers wouldn’t have to pay royalties to the Moving Picture Experts Group (MPEG), the developer of video codecs such as h.264 and HEVC. As we saw with the HEVC codec, MPEG wasn’t the only group that could ask for royalties. Other patent groups and companies came out saying that users of HEVC infringe on their patents.

The AOM brought together Google, which developed the VP9 and was working on the VP10 codec; Mozilla, which was working on "Daala"; and Cisco, which was also developing its own “Thor” codec. However, the three joined together to create one codec to beat them all, while also avoiding all the potential patent infringements. AOM’s founders’ list also included companies such as Amazon, Netflix, and Microsoft.

The IETF has also been watching closely these companies’ efforts, as it plans to make the codec an official IETF standard, that could get the name NETVC.

AV1 Specification

AOM’s announcement said that AV1 can deliver a 30% and even up to 40% greater compression over competing codecs such as VP9 and HEVC, based on multiple tests done by the alliance members.

AOM also said that AV1 will enable cross-platform 4k UHD video playback, deeper colors, brighter highlights, darker shadows, and other enhanced UHD imaging features, all while using less data.

Paul Gray, a Research Director at IHS Markit, a global business information provider, said the following:

We expect that the installed base of 4K television sets to reach 300 million by the end of 2019 and therefore there is already latent demand for UHD services over today’s infrastructure. AV1 will be widely supported across the entire content chain, especially including services. We forecast rapid introduction of AV1 content delivery to help the widespread proliferation of UHD streaming.

The release of the AV1 video codec includes a bitstream specification for future chips, an experimental software decoder and encoder to create and consume the bitstream, as well as reference streams for product validation.

AVIF vs HEIC/HEIF

Although Apple recently embraced HEIF/HEIC, and Google and Microsoft also plan to adopt it in their next versions of their operating systems, HEIC remains a proprietary format developed by MPEG, with many of the same potential issues as HEVC.

Some of the AOM members, led by Netflix, have started the development of a next-generation open image format called AV1 Still Image File Format (AVIF). The format will presumably be competitive with HEIF in terms of file size and quality but will do away with royalty and patent issues.

A More Open Web

Google’s VP8 codec, which it purchased along with On2 Technologies, never really caught on, because it took too long to achieve performance parity with MPEG’s h.264 codec. By the time it reached performance parity, MPEG’s HEVC had already arrived.

AV1 Codec Adoption Engine. Credit: AOMAV1 should succeed because virtually all the main tech players support it, it has significantly better performance than HEVC, and MPEG hasn’t had time to come up with a better alternative. Plus, all the patent issues likely didn't help. Depending on how soon Netflix and other AOM members can develop a free and open alternative to HEIF, the next-generation image format will also be an open format.

Yaaas! This sounds like good news!Can't wait for the new image format! I was hoping for success of Fabrice Bellard's free/open BPG format, but that could still be subject to patent claims because it relies on x265 compression techniques.

Just keep in mind that it will probably be another year or more before fixed-function decoding support for AV1 starts appearing in hardware, and viewing the format on current hardware will require a lot of CPU resources to handle the software decoding. From what I've heard, encoding is more computationally intensive too, so I would expect software-based encoding to be quite slow.

Just keep in mind that it will probably be another year or more before fixed-function decoding support for AV1 starts appearing in hardware, and viewing the format on current hardware will require a lot of CPU resources to handle the software decoding. From what I've heard, encoding is more computationally intensive too, so I would expect software-based encoding to be quite slow.

Hey, what better use for all those cores in Ryzen! Encoding w/multiple threads is where they really shine.